
Even as she prepares for her 70th birthday in 2008, Joan Tower is looking forward as much as she is
looking back on a career that already spans over five decades.
Hailed as "one of the most successful woman composers of all time" in The New Yorker
magazine, Joan Tower was the first woman ever to receive the Grawemeyer Award in Composition in 1990.
She was inducted in 1998 into the prestigious American Academy of Arts and Letters, and into the
Academy of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University in the fall of 2004.
In January 2004, Carnegie Hall's Making Music series featured a retrospective of Tower's
work. This special event showcased numerous artists who regularly perform her music, including the
Tokyo String Quartet, pianists Melvin Chen and Ursula Oppens, violist Paul Neubauer, oboist Richard
Woodhams, and the New England Conservatory Percussion Ensemble. Most of these works were then recorded
for August 2005 release on the NAXOS recording label.
In March 2004, Tower attended the premiere of her new piece, For Daniel, written for
the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio at the Tucson Winter Festival, and the New York premiere at the
92nd Street Y. She performed the piano part with members of the Muir Quartet and the KLR Trio has gone
on to performing this work around the world. Tambor was performed by the Pittsburgh
Symphony at the American Symphony Orchestra League Convention in Pittsburgh in 2004 and recorded on
NAXOS along with Made in America and Concerto for Orchestra (Leonard
Slatkin conducting the Nashville Symphony). Purple Rhapsody, a new viola concerto for
Paul Neubauer, has so far been performed be eight orchestras including the Omaha Symphony, who
premiered it. The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra commissioned and premiered Chamber Dance
at Carnegie Hall in May of 2006.
Joan Tower is the first composer chosen for the ambitious new "Ford Made in America" commissioning
program, a collaboration of the American Symphony Orchestra League and Meet the Composer. In October
2005, the Glens Falls Symphony Orchestra presented the world premiere of Tower's 15 minute orchestral
piece Made in America. The work went on for performances by orchestras in every state
in the Union during the 2005-07 season. This is the first project of its kind to involve smaller budget
orchestras as commissioning agents of a new work by a major composer.
Tower has added "conductor" to her list of accomplishments, with engagements at the American Symphony,
the Hudson Valley Philharmonic, the Scotia Festival Orchestra, the Anchorage Symphony, Kalisto Chamber
Orchestra and another eight of the Made in America orchestras, among others.
Since 1972, Tower has taught at Bard College, where she is Asher Edelman Professor of Music. She has
served as composer-in-residence with the Orchestra of St. Luke's since 1997 and at the Deer Valley
Festival in Utah since 1998, a title she also held for eight years at the Yale/Norfolk Chamber Music
Festival. Other accolades include the 1998 Delaware Symphony's Alfred I. DuPont Award for Distinguished
American Composer, the 2002 Annual Composer's Award from the Lancaster (PA) Symphony, and an Honorary
Degree from the New England Conservatory (2006). "Tower has truly earned a place among the most
original and forceful voices in modern American music" (The Detroit News).
Tower's 2003-04 season featured two significant world premieres: DNA, a percussion
quintet commissioned for Frank Epstein and his New England Conservatory Percussion Ensemble; and her
third string quartet, Incandescent, for the Emerson String Quartet, performed at the
opening of the new Frank Gehry-designed Richard B. Fisher Center at Bard College. The Emerson Quartet
has embraced Incandescent and is touring it throughout the world. The success of
Tower's second string quartet, In Memory, premiered by the Tokyo String Quartet in
2002 at the 92nd Street Y, was a highlight of their tour of three continents. Her percussion concerto,
Strike Zones, was performed at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center by Evelyn Glennie
with the National Symphony Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin and was featured at Tanglewood in
2007.
Other compositions have crossed many genres: Can I (2007) for youth chorus and two
percussionists; Copperwave (2006), written for the American Brass Quintet and
commissioned by the Juilliard School of Music; Fascinating Ribbons (2001), her foray
into the world of band music, premiered at the annual conference of College Band Directors;
Vast Antique Cubes/Throbbing Still (2000), a solo piano piece for John Browning;
Big Sky (2000), a piano trio premiered by David Finckel, Wu Han, and Chee-Yun;
Tambor (1998), for the Pittsburgh Symphony under the baton of Mariss Jansons; and
Wild Purple (1998) for violist Paul Neubauer. Tower's 1990 Grawemeyer Award-winning
Silver Ladders was written during her 1985-88 St. Louis Symphony residency, and was
subsequently choreographed in 1998 by Helgi Tomasson and the San Francisco Ballet. Her 1993 ballet
Stepping Stones was commissioned by choreographer Kathryn Posin for the Milwaukee
Ballet.
Joan Tower's bold and energetic music, with its striking imagery and novel structural forms, has won
large, enthusiastic audiences. From 1969 to 1984, she was pianist and founding member of the Naumburg
Award-winning Da Capo Chamber Players, which commissioned and premiered many of her most popular works.
Her first orchestral work, Sequoia, quickly entered the repertory, with performances
by orchestras including St. Louis, New York, San Francisco, Minnesota, Tokyo NHK, Toronto, the National
Symphony and London Philharmonia. A choreographed version by The Royal Winnipeg Ballet toured
throughout Canada, Europe, and Russia. Tower's tremendously popular five Fanfares for the
Uncommon Woman have been played by over 500 different ensembles.
In addition to her two NAXOS recordings, Tower's popular Petroushskates opens the new
first recording by the innovative group, eighth blackbird, on the Cedille label. Fanfares Nos.
1-5, Duets, and Concerto for Orchestra with the Colorado
Symphony (Marin Alsop) may be heard on Koch; and Tower's Four Concertos - with Elmar
Oliveira, Ursula Oppens, David Shifrin, Carol Wincenc and the Louisville Orchestra - is available on
d'Note Records. Turning Points (1995), a clarinet quintet for David Shifrin and the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, is on Delos. New World Records features he chamber music,
including her first string quartet Night Fields. First Edition celebrates her legacy
with the St. Louis and Louisville Symphonies with an all-Tower orchestral disc which includes
Sequoia, Silver Ladders, Music for Cello and
Orchestra, and Island Prelude for oboe and strings featuring soloists Lynn
Harrell and Peter Bowman.
Joan Tower has been the subject of television documentaries on PBS's WGBH television station in
Boston, on the CBS network program, Sunday Morning, and MJW Productions in England. She is published
exclusively by Associated Music Publishers, a division of The Music Sales Group.
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